Cooking With Barley
May. 21st, 2010 05:37 pmI made lemon barley water this morning.
Apparently it's good for you in all sorts of ways.
I simmered two ounces of pearl barley in a quart of water for half an hour (all measurements approx), strained off the water, added the grated rind and juice of one lemon, then allowed it to cool.
The recipe I was following also calls for honey, ginger and cinammon- but I don't see why. I tasted it. Ailz tasted it- and we agreed it was fine as it was.
Then, at the recipe writer's suggestion, I improvised a soup around the cooked barley- and that's what we had for lunch.
Apparently it's good for you in all sorts of ways.
I simmered two ounces of pearl barley in a quart of water for half an hour (all measurements approx), strained off the water, added the grated rind and juice of one lemon, then allowed it to cool.
The recipe I was following also calls for honey, ginger and cinammon- but I don't see why. I tasted it. Ailz tasted it- and we agreed it was fine as it was.
Then, at the recipe writer's suggestion, I improvised a soup around the cooked barley- and that's what we had for lunch.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-22 07:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-23 01:22 pm (UTC)The iconic instant fruit-flavored drink of my generation was Kool-Aid, which at least in my day was made from a concentrated powder, sold in packets, to which was added water and sugar. I suspect that lemon barley is much better, obviously.
My wife's grandfather was from Edinburgh, so despite the fact she was born and raised in Managua, she loves lemon-flavored oatmeal water, which sounds suspciciously like your lemon barley water, only with more mucilage.